Events

The following items are tagged Events.

Nonviolent Power in Action: observations from an expert on what happened in Egypt, Tunisia and beyond

Posted by & filed under Daily, Events, International Negotiation, Negotiation and Nonviolent Action, Student Events, Students.

Watch the video of the PON Brown Bag Lunch:
The Dynamics of Nonviolent Power:
Egypt, Tunisia and beyond

with

Hardy Merriman
Senior Advisor at the International Center on Nonviolent Conflict (ICNC)
Recorded: April 20, 2011
 

Click here to watch the video:

http://www.law.harvard.edu/media/2011/04/20_pon.mov

 
About the Event: The Dynamics of Nonviolent Power: Egypt, Tunisia and Beyond
By: Carrie O’Neil, PON Research Assistant
What makes nonviolent, civilian-based movements

Clearinghouse Customers Speak!

Posted by & filed under Daily, Negotiation Skills, Pedagogy at the Program on Negotiation (Pedagogy @ PON).

In an effort to understand more about how the PON Clearinghouse does and doesn’t meet its customers’ needs, we interviewed a number of long-time Clearinghouse clients. We asked what teaching materials they found most valuable and for what reasons. We also asked how they found out about the Clearinghouse and what additional teaching and training

The Dynamics of Nonviolent Power:
Egypt, Tunisia and beyond

Posted by & filed under Daily, Events, International Negotiation, Negotiation and Nonviolent Action, Student Events, Students.

The Dynamics of Nonviolent Power:
Egypt, Tunisia and beyond

with

Hardy Merriman
Senior Advisor at the International Center on Nonviolent Conflict (ICNC)
 
Date: April 20, 2011
Time: 12:00PM to 1:30PM
Where: Pound  Hall, Room 108, Harvard Law School Campus
Bring your lunch. Drinks and dessert will be served.
Click here for a campus map.

About the lunch:
What makes nonviolent, civilian-based movements effective?  What

Conference on Afghanistan: “Ten Years Later”

Posted by & filed under Student Events, Students.

ESSEC Graduate School of Management, Mardis de l’ESSEC and Fahimeh & Tina Robiolle Consulting & Training
present:

Afghanistan, Ten Years Later

 
Tuesday March 29th
2:00-4:00pm EST

ESSEC campus in France, & live online!
In order to discuss the social, political and ethnic configuration of Afghanistan ten years after the start of the democratic process, this conference will

How Much Should You Share?

Posted by & filed under Business Negotiations, Daily.

Adapted from “Know When to Show Your Hand,” by Carrie Menkel-Meadow (professor, Georgetown University Law Center), first published in the Negotiation newsletter.

Suppose that two entrepreneurs, a marketing expert and an IT specialist, are thinking about merging their consulting firms to create a greater synergy of services. As their talks unfold, each wonders how much information

Knocking

Posted by & filed under Daily, Events, PON Film Series, Student Events, Students.

At first glance, Knocking is about Jehovah’s Witnesses, the door-to-door proselytizers we like to hide from. But there’s a bigger story as the film asks whether they are a necessary annoyance in a free society. What if you wanted to speak, publish, worship or live as you choose but belonged to the marginalized group of

Dealing With a Stubborn Counterpart

Posted by & filed under Daily, Negotiation Skills.

Adapted from “Stubborn or Irrational? How to Cope with a Difficult Negotiating Partner,” by Lawrence Susskind (professor, Massachusetts Institute of Technology), first published in the Negotiation newsletter.

Suppose you’re an experienced salesperson entering into negotiations for a contract renewal with a company you’ve successfully done business with for years. Recently, your counterpart at the other company

Save the Dates: Announcing the PON Spring 2011 Events Calendar

Posted by & filed under Daily, Events.

The Program on Negotiation Spring 2011 Events Calendar:
February 1: Herbert C. Kelman Seminar on International Conflict Analysis and Resolution, Negotiation, Conflict and the News Media: Cambodia, Kevin Doyle and Steve Marks, 4:00pm-6:00pm

February 15: Brown Bag Lunch Series: Hamas, Hezbollah, and the Muslim Brotherhood – Obstacles to Peace in the

When Focus Comes at a Price

Posted by & filed under Negotiation Skills.

Adapted from “The High Cost of Low Focus,” by Max H. Bazerman (professor, Harvard Business School), first published in the Negotiation newsletter.

Has someone (perhaps a significant other) ever told you that you’ve previously seen or heard something that you don’t recall? When someone says, “I already told you that!” in exasperation, do you assume that